Monthly Archives: January 2012

Detours are wonderful things

I made it to one deadline – MFA’s Winter Member Juried Competition- literally at the last minute.  The gallery director was leaving at 6 pm – and I got there to enter my painting at 5:55.

Painting all those little birds — 11 in all — really paid off, because they provided me with great practice.   I was creating this painting with palette knives (the underpainting as well), adding an acrylic skin of a portion of a bird’s nest at the bottom, with decorative paper here and there, and stamps with a flourish…and then a bird simply called out to be put on the canvas.  Not the smaller songbirds I had been painting, but a more dramatic rose-breasted grossbeak.   He and the branch simply flowed off my brush; it was almost an other-worldly experience, like my hand was being guided.  As a spiritual person, and I have to say that something more powerful than I created that bird.

And I believe that even more because the painting was selected by the juror to be in the show.  This bird has a message for me…

The painting is called “I Rule.”  He just looks like he is the ruler of all he surveys; elephants and nests and trees and berries galore — and mysteries yet to be discovered.

Okay then – I made it!  Now there is another deadline tomorrow:  Art On Paper, a national juried exhibition, also through the MFA.  Wish me luck!

Another detour…

There’s a fine line between remaining flexible along the path to your goal and being sidetracked due to a lack of focus.  I’m choosing to consider this effort as an exercise in flexibility as it contributes to my greater goal of continued growth as a painter. That’s a very general goal, so it’s hard to consider any painting activity as not contributing to it.  (I’m the queen of rationalization.)  The more specific and immediate goals are to create paintings for juried competitions, and also to continue with the abstract tree series in order to be ready for my solo show.

Deciding to paint Shannon was an easy distraction though – she’s beautiful, and I needed a gift for her loving walker/sitter (I call her Shannon’s nanny!).  She’s a minimalist, and lives an uncluttered life (aren’t you envious?!), so I could think of nothing better as a Christmas gift than a painting of a beloved pooch!

Let’s hope the next post provides progress towards one of my immediate goals, or I will have to admit to a slight problem with focus.  (Me?  Lose focus?  Never!  I’m absolutely certain there is an excellent reason for painting cartoon lambs and giraffes when the deadline for the juried competition I want to enter is tomorrow…)

Anyone have any suggestions for staying creatively on track?  I’d love to hear them!